Couples, Lowery share AT&T lead

Couples, Lowery share AT&T lead

Published Oct. 14, 2011 1:00 a.m. ET

Fred Couples shot a 7-under 65 to take a share of the first-round lead with Steve Lowery on Friday at the Champions Tour's AT&T Championship.

Lowery settled for a birdie at the 190-yard 13th after his 6-iron lipped out, then holed out from the fairway from 168 yards with an 8-iron for an eagle on the next hole.

Hal Sutton and Nick Price were a stroke behind, and Tommy Armour III and Chien Soon Lu had 67s.

Ten players were 4 under: Phil Blackmar, Mark Calcavecchia, Bobby Clampett, Russ Cochran, Scott Hoch, John Huston, Gil Morgan, Steve Pate, Loren Roberts and Eduardo Romero.

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This is the first year the event has been played at TPC San Antonio's Canyon Course, and more than half the field shot under par. There was hardly a breeze on a nearly cloudless day.

Defending champion Rod Spittle (74) was among the 31 players over par.

Couples is playing for the third straight week and is looking for his third-straight top-10 finish despite back problems that have been eased by protein injections he received in Germany. He won the Senior Players Championship in August and tied for 15th at the Masters.

''I feel pretty good right now,'' Couples said. ''But I'm not going to overdo it.''

Though he birdied his first three holes and had eight for the day, he got big breaks with a 30-foot putt for par on the No. 8 and then saw his errant drive at No. 12 hit a rock and bounced back into the middle of the fairway. He birdied.

''Little jumps like that are big moves,'' Couples said.

Lowery, who's victory at the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am three years ago is one of his three victories on the regular tour, is looking for his first trophy on the Champions Tour. He would have come in with the lead if not for a bunker shot at No. 17 that clipped the lip of the trap and barely dribbled onto the green. That left him 90 feet from the cup, and he three-putted.

It's the last full-field tournament for the Champions Tour before the top 30 in the point standings head to the season-ending Charles Schwab Cup at Harding Park in San Francisco in three weeks.

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